Page:The Salticidae (Spiders) of Panama.djvu/259

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CHICKERING: SALTICID SPIDERS OF PANAMA
257

fourth metatarsi entirely reddish brown; first three pairs of tarsi yellowish, fourth pair reddish brown with yellowish tips. Carapace: rich reddish brown, almost black around eyes; a broken white stripe extends on each side from ALE to posterolateral corner and down to posterior border; a few white scales along ventral margin; central part of clypeus between AME without whitw scales which extend as a tuft beneath AME and over front surface of chelicerae and, less conspicuously, laterally along cheek region. Abdomen: dark reddish brown at base; then a series of light and dark bars on dorsum best shown in Figure 217; thus nine distinct dorsolateral bars; venter dull brown.

Female. Characters briefly summarized by Banks ('29). Epigynum with a deep central posterior marginal notch and a median swelling separating two shallow cavities (Fig. 218).

Type locality. Male allotype from Canal Zone Biological Area, June, 1939. Male paratypes and females from the following localities: El Valle, R. P., July 1936; Canal Zone Forest Reserve, C. Z., July–Aug., 1939; Canal Zone Biological Area, June, Aug., 1939.


Genus Avitus Peckham, 1896

Avitus diolenii Peckham, 1896

Avitus diolenii F. Cambridge, 1901
A. diolenii Simon, 1901
A. diolenii Petrunkevitch, 1911
A. diolenii Petrunkevitch, 1925

The Peckhams had a single male from Panama sent to them by Count Keyserling. So far as I know, the species has not been collected since that time. It has not yet appeared in my collection. I have a single male from the Canal Zone Biological Area, Aug., 1939, which I have tentatively assigned to this genus. It is a damaged specimen and will not be described in this paper. When better specimens are available it will certainly have to be described as a new species and possibly will be the basis of a new genus.


Genus Beata Peckham, 1895

Professor Petrunkevitch ('25) considered that six species of the genus Beata were known at the time of his paper on Arachnida from Panama. He gave a detailed description of the female of B. magna